Federal Judge Robert L. Hinkle issued an order stating the court will grant the groups request to permanently remove the restrictions once he receives confirmation that a federal appeals court has dismissed the case.

The League of Women Voters of Florida, Rock the Vote, and the Florida Public Interest Research Group Education Fund (PIRG) filed a lawsuit in December challenging the restrictions. Judge Hinkle temporarily blocked enforcement of the law in May, saying the restrictions violated the U.S. Constitution and federal law.

This order is a decisive victory for Florida voters, said Lee Rowland, counsel for the Brennan Centers Democracy Program, one of the attorneys who argued the case for the Plaintiffs. The Florida legislature has tried repeatedly to stifle access to voter registration opportunities, and once again a federal court has stopped them in their tracks. We are thrilled that voter registration groups can now get back to what they do best  expanding our democracy.

Floridas anti-voter law created impassable roadblocks for our volunteers, who have been bringing fellow Floridians into our democratic process for over 72 years, explained Deirdre Macnab, President of the League of Women Voters of Florida. Thanks to todays ruling, we can finally put these roadblocks behind us and concentrate on getting Floridians registered to vote. We are grateful the court recognized that the Constitution does not tolerate these types of barriers to civic participation and voter registration.

Rock the Vote is thrilled that the most restrictive parts of Floridas new law will be blocked. Were now focused on the future: helping tens of thousands of young Florida residents register to vote before the November election, stated Heather Smith, President of Rock the Vote. Todays order means we will be out in Florida making sure that young people have a voice in their communities. Its a victory for them, and for our democracy.

Florida PIRG is committed to signing up thousands of first time voters across the state each election cycle. Our representative democracy relies on an engaged citizenry, yet our representatives in Florida have repeatedly passed laws that get in the way of expanding voter participation, added Leigh-Anne Cole, Field Director of Student PIRGs and spokesperson for the Florida Public Interest Research Group Education Fund. We are eager to move forward with our important civic engagement work, and hail todays important victory.

Our leaders should encourage more people to participate in the democratic process, not punish people for trying doing so, stated Julie Ebenstein, Staff Attorney for the ACLU of Florida. We are pleased that this order ends a pointless and regressive barrier to the fundamental right to vote.

We are pleased that our clients and civic groups all across the state of Florida can again register voters free from the intimidation and threat of punishment created by this unconstitutional law, said Robert Atkins, a partner at Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP representing the plaintiffs.

Today, the Court indicated that it will grant a joint motion filed by both the civic groups and the state of Florida permanently removing the restrictions. Both the civic groups and the state of Florida have agreed not to appeal the ruling. The parties separately signed a settlement that ends the case once the court granted this motion and awards the civic groups their attorneys costs.

The Florida law is just one in a wave of restrictive voting measures that passed in 2011. Together, these laws could make it harder for millions of eligible Americans to vote this November, according to the Brennan Centers report Voting Law Changes in 2012. Todays ruling is part of the pushback against these suppressive laws.

It just points up to the need for reforming the Idiot self-perpetuation at taxpayer expense of libbieism. The courts are a disgrace that play like they don't know they're helping illegal vicemongers in the DNC for votes. Omerta rules there.

The people want their court system back and the one-man-one-vote system reinstated.

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